US deports former Guatemalan soldier wanted in 1982 massacre
GUATEMALA CITY — A former Guatemalan soldier deported from the United States in handcuffs and flanked by security maintained his innocence in the face of accusations that he helped massacre more than 200 people more than three decades ago during his country’s grueling civil war.
Soon after Santos Lopez Alonzo landed in Guatemala City Wednesday on a charter flight for American deportees, advocates for victims’ relatives said they hoped he’d be held accountable for the onslaught that wiped out the small village of Las Dos Erres in 1982.
“We are very happy they deported him and that he must now face Guatemalan justice, above all, for the victims, who have always demanded justice,” said Francisco Vivar, an advocate for victims.
The now-64-year-old Lopez served with an elite unit of the Guatemalan army and is among four former soldiers accused in the massacre who were arrested after heading to the United States. Two are now serving time in American prisons for immigration crimes related to the killings and one was deported and sentenced to more than 6,000 years in prison.


